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14.5/20

Homer Rogue Taverna

Koulouri with tzatziki, olives and tirokafteri.
1 / 9Koulouri with tzatziki, olives and tirokafteri.Wolter Peeters
Spankopita flatbread.
2 / 9Spankopita flatbread.Jennifer Soo
Pork souvla.
3 / 9Pork souvla.Jennifer Soo
Beetroot salad.
4 / 9Beetroot salad.Wolter Peeters
Spanakorizo with fish, rice, lemon and greens.
5 / 9Spanakorizo with fish, rice, lemon and greens.Wolter Peeters
Mum’s moussaka.
6 / 9Mum’s moussaka. Wolter Peeters
Grilled souvlaki octopus.
7 / 9Grilled souvlaki octopus. Wolter Peeters
Greek table wine is $38 for a carafe.
8 / 9Greek table wine is $38 for a carafe.Wolter Peeters
Homer’s wine list is a 50/50 split between Australian and Greek winemakers.
9 / 9Homer’s wine list is a 50/50 split between Australian and Greek winemakers.Wolter Peeters
14.5/20

Homer Rogue Taverna

Greek$$

Modern taverna catering to multiple generations.

OK, very good. This is fun. There is bread, there are dips and plenty of ouzo. All your favourite Greek singer and songwriters are pumping on the stereo – Vasilis Karras, Pantelis Pantelidis, et al – and fat wodges of walnut cake come out on frosted glass plates.

“Homer” is graffitied multiple times on a bare concrete wall, and a long blue Easter candle burns alone in the middle of the room. The 100-seater is also packed with locals, stoked to have a new restaurant that bakes its own sesame-crusted koulouri rings, grills souvla, wraps dolmades and leans into Greek tradition with a high degree of enthusiasm.

Silky manouri cheese is sweet with honey, crunchy with kataifi and baked until it’s as bronzed as a surfer dad. Pork and chicken souvla understand their smoky-juicy-meaty assignment; “our mum’s moussaka” is a perfect no-nonsense square of beef and bechamel served hot.

Created by brothers Harry and Mario Kapoulas, Homer is a place where you can dress up to look nice and not be put out if there’s a guy at the next table wearing a backwards Oakland Raiders cap. Landing this kind of vibe is not an easy thing to do.

Good to know: There’s usually at least one staff member who can take you through the differences between assyrtiko and malagousia from the Greek and Australian wine list.

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